The Lateral Signal for LIN-12/Notch in C

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The Lateral Signal for LIN-12/Notch in C The Lateral Signal for LIN-12/Notch in C. elegans Vulval Development Comprises Redundant Secreted and Transmembrane DSL Proteins  Ning Chen, Iva Greenwald  Developmental Cell  Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 183-192 (February 2004) DOI: 10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8

Figure 1 Schematic View of VPC Specification and Relevant Markers for Cell Fate In the L3 stage, six initially equivalent VPCs, P3.p–P8.p, adopt a 3°-3°-2°-1°-2°-3° pattern of cell fates, the net outcome of inductive, lateral, and inhibitory signaling. The inductive signal LIN-3, represented by arrows, appears to form a spatial gradient (Sternberg and Horvitz, 1986; Yoo et al., in press). The lateral signal is the subject of this study. It has been hypothesized to originate in the presumptive 1° cell (Sternberg, 1988) and is represented by open arrows. An inhibitory signal, believed to originate in the hyp7 hypodermal syncytium (Herman and Hedgecock, 1990), is not shown. The descendants of cells that adopt the 1° and 2° fates form the vulva; the progeny of cells that adopt the 3° fate fuse with the hypodermal syncytium. The three cell fates can be distinguished by cell lineage and the pattern of marker gene expression. We have used expression of the transcriptional reporter egl-17::gfp or egl-17::cfp-lacZ at the “Pn.px” stage as a marker for a VPC that adopted the 1° fate (Burdine et al., 1998; Yoo et al., in press). We have also used the presence of the GFP-tagged protein AJM-1::GFP (expressed from jcIs1), a cell junction marker (Koppen et al., 2001), at the Pn.pxx stage as a marker for VPCs that have adopted vulval fates. Developmental Cell 2004 6, 183-192DOI: (10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8)

Figure 2 Predicted C. elegans DSL Proteins (A) Schematic domain structure of predicted C. elegans DSL proteins. The diagnostic DSL and EGF motifs are shown, as are predicted signal sequence and transmembrane domains. (B) Phylogenetic relationship among the ten C. elegans DSL proteins, based on CLUSTALW analysis of DSL domains. The first EGF domain from Drosophila Notch and other EGF domains from other LIN-12/Notch proteins (not shown) were included along with the DSL domains of the proteins shown to create the alignment. It is curious that all of the putative secreted DSL proteins, except for DSL-4, appear to be more closely related to each other than to the canonical DSL proteins. This resemblance extends to the overall domain structure, as these six proteins all have only a single EGF domain. C. briggsae orthologs of LAG-2, APX-1, DSL-1, DSL-3, and DSL-7 have been identified (see supplemental figures). Developmental Cell 2004 6, 183-192DOI: (10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8)

Figure 3 Some DSL Proteins Lack Predicted Transmembrane Domains (A) Assessment of potential transmembrane domains for C. elegans DSL proteins. We used several different programs to analyze the DSL protein sequences. The plots shown here were generated using TMAP (Persson and Argos, 1997), which gives an indication of the hydrophobicity throughout the protein sequence. Peaks represent the predicted signal sequence (S) and potential transmembrane domains, both indicated in black. The probability values calculated by TMHMM (Krogh et al., 2001) are indicated for potential transmembrane domains; 1.0 is the highest value, and where probability values are not shown, no potential membrane spanning domain was found by this program. We note that TMHMM has been evaluated as the best-performing program for this purpose of many available (Moller et al., 2001; Melen et al., 2003). The presence or absence of predicted transmembrane domains is conserved in C. briggsae (see supplemental figures). (B) Two spider DSL proteins also lack predicted transmembrane domains. Developmental Cell 2004 6, 183-192DOI: (10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8)

Figure 4 Reduction of apx-1, dsl-1, or lag-2 Activity Can Cause Adjacent VPCs to Adopt the 1° Fate The ayIs4[egl-17::gfp] marker for the 1° fate was also present. For each genotype, the number of hermaphrodites scored at the Pn.px stage is indicated below the corresponding bar. % of worms affected = % of worms in which there is at least one pair of adjacent VPCs that both adopted the 1° fate. % adjacent 1° fate = % of adjacent pairs in which both VPCs adopted the 1° fate. (A and B) lin-15(n309) and let-60(kuIs14) backgrounds. lin-12(RNAi) results in a highly penetrant 2 AC phenotype; we do not know to what extent this 2 AC phenotype may contribute to the high frequency of lateral signaling defects observed. The penetrance of the 2 AC phenotype in lag-2(RNAi) hermaphrodites is not complete, and the frequency of lateral signaling defects observed in hermaphrodites having only 1 AC is shown. (C) dsl-1(ok810); lin-15(n309) background. We performed a Z-test to ascertain whether the apparent differences are statistically significant. As the “% worms affected” is high even for the control, we focused on differences for the “% adjacent 1° fate.” All are significantly different from the control. lag-2 is different from apx-1 + lag-2 (p < 0.0001), and apx-1 is different from apx-1 + lag-2 (p = 0.0004). (D) dsl-1(ok810) background. The jcIs1[ajm-1::gfp] marker for the vulval fate was also present. Absence of ajm-1::gfp in P5.px and P7.px indicates loss of 2° fate. The low penetrance loss of 2° fate observed in the control is due to the dsl-1 allele and not the ajm-1::gfp marker (data not shown). The Z-test indicates that both apx-1 + lag-2 (p = 0.006) and lin-12 (p = 0.002) are significantly different from the control and are not different from each other (p = 0.865). Developmental Cell 2004 6, 183-192DOI: (10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8)

Figure 5 Expression of Transcriptional Reporters for apx-1, dsl-1, or lag-2 (A) Schematic view of the apx-1, dsl-1, and lag-2 genomic regions. Dark gray boxes represent exons of apx-1, dsl-1, or lag-2. Open boxes represent the next gene upstream. Dashed lines represent the extent of the 5′ flanking regions that were used to drive the transcriptional reporter. (B) Expression of lag-2 in VPCs at a time inferred to be prior to inductive signaling (“lag-2early”), based on the size of the worm and development of the gonad. Here and in (C), arrows indicate P6.p or its descendants, lines indicate other VPCs or their descendants, and n indicates ventral cord neurons. MH27 was stained with Cy5-conjugated secondary antibody (blue), and lacZ was stained with Cy3-conjugated secondary antibody (red) (see Experimental Procedures). (C) Expression of apx-1, dsl-1, or lag-2 is shown at the Pn.p (VPC) stage at a time inferred to be after inductive signaling. Expression in the descendants of P6.p at the Pn.px and Pn.pxx stages is also shown. Developmental Cell 2004 6, 183-192DOI: (10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8)

Figure 6 Transcriptional Regulation of apx-1 by Inductive Signaling (A) Expression of apx-1::lacZ depends on inductive signaling. arIs89 is an integrated transgene carrying the apx-1::lacZ transcriptional reporter (see Experimental Procedures). Relevant Pn.px cells are indicated by arrows. MH27 was stained with Cy5-conjugated secondary antibody (blue), and lacZ was stained with Cy3-conjugated secondary antibody (red). apx-1 reporter expression is not seen in lin-3(e1417) hermaphrodites; ectopic expression is seen in alternating VPCs in lin-15(n309) hermaphrodites. Similar results were also obtained for transcriptional reporters for dsl-1 and lag-2 (data not shown). (B) Expression of transcriptional reporters for apx-1, dsl-1, and lag-2 is specifically reduced in a sur-2 null mutant background. Note that most sur-2(0) hermaphrodites express the marker egl-17::cfp-lacZ, indicating that by this criterion, they have adopted the 1° fate. For each genotype, the number of hermaphrodites scored at the Pn.px stage is indicated above the corresponding bar. Developmental Cell 2004 6, 183-192DOI: (10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8)

Figure 7 DSL-1 Can Functionally Substitute for LAG-2 and Is Secreted (A) Rescue of lag-2(ts) by DSL-1. Experiments were conducted as described in Experimental Procedures. For each genotype, the number of animals scored for each trait is indicated above the corresponding bar. No transgene = lag-2(q420). Control = lag-2(q420); arEx486[cdh-3::gfp]. lag-2p::DSL-1 = lag-2(q420); arEx489[cdh-3::gfp + lag-2p::DSL-1]. (B and C) Ectopic activation of GLP-1 in the germline by DSL-1 expressed in coelomocytes provides evidence that DSL-1 is a secreted protein. (B) Photomicrographs of DAPI-stained gonads. The germline of the unc-122p::apx-1(+) hermaphrodite appears wild-type, and that of unc-122p::dsl-1(+) displays a tumorous phenotype indicative of GLP-1 hyperactivation. (C) Quantitation of the tumorous phenotype associated with expression of secreted ligands in coelomocytes. Each bar represents an independent transgenic line. Because sterility caused by expression of the extracellular domain of APX-1 [APX-1(extra)] is so highly penetrant, lines could not be maintained, so the F2 progeny of individual F1 transgenic hermaphrodites were scored. Developmental Cell 2004 6, 183-192DOI: (10.1016/S1534-5807(04)00021-8)